Archive for October 1st, 2007

October 2007 in Artforum

Monday, October 1st, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Artforum

October 2007 in Artforum

Artforum
350 Seventh Ave, 19th Floor
New York, New York 10001
t: 212.475-4000 f: 212.529-1257

http://www.Artforum.com

This month in Artforum: “The Art of Production.” What was once seditious is now ubiquitous. If ninety years ago Marcel Duchamp infamously claimed the products of industry as his own and a half century later Donald Judd furthered this scandal by directly co-opting the language of manufacture, today artists employ the hands and machines of others so commonly as to scarcely draw notice. Many artworks of our time involve outsourced labor, industrial processes, and custom fabrication. This special issue of Artforum aims to draw these varied approaches into sharp, if wide-angle, focus, momentarily shifting attention from finished pieces to the often unseen processes that bring them into being.

“The fabrication workshop Carlson & Co., which has collaborated for decades with artists from Claes Oldenburg to Rodney Graham, portends a moment when there is absolutely no standardization, because everything is made to order; but this is a postindustrial dream perpetually deferred.” –Michelle Kuo

On the theme of production, art historian and critic Michelle Kuo provides a survey of art fabrication sites from the 1960s through today; Caroline A. Jones pays a visit to the Berlin studio of Olafur Eliasson, whose collaborative practice produces not only objects but “knowledge,” traversing the boundaries of diverse disciplines, including architecture, design, and engineering; Josiah McElheny proposes a taxonomy of “faking,” “borrowing,” and “stealing” to classify contemporary artists’ relationships to the readymade and its underlying industrial processes; and Pamela M. Lee looks beneath Takashi Murakami’s Superflat surfaces to locate the digital technics subtending his experiments in mass and niche marketing. Finally, writer Philip Tinari navigates China’s Dafen Oil Painting Village, the world’s largest site of painting production and reproduction. In addition, eleven artists–Sam Durant, Urs Fischer, Sherrie Levine, and Bridget Riley among them–offer their personal exper
iences in fabrication.

To cap the issue, Artforum convenes a roundtable discussion including representatives from various fields, the interactions of which are directly responsible for so many artworks today.

“I sense there is now a post-Koons cult of extreme production values developing, in which the expense of the production overshadows the content of the work.” –Jeffrey Deitch

Also in October: David Joselit visits Richard Serra’s retrospective at MoMA and weighs the dangers of society against the dangers of sculpture; Lisa Turvey considers Frank Stella’s move into architecture; senior editor Elizabeth Schambelan reads artist Luca Frei’s translation of The So-Called Utopia of the Centre Beaubourg by Albert Meister, about a ’70s art commune beneath the Pompidou; Julia Bryan-Wilson analyzes the resistance to mainstream accounts of the Iraq War that is central to 9 Scripts from a Nation at War, recently on view at Documenta 12; Rosalind Krauss argues for time taken in “Invisible Colors” at Marian Goodman, Paris; Maria Morris Hambourg remembers influential MoMA photography curator John Szarkowski; Thomas Struth and Blake Stimson pay tribute to photographer and teacher Bernd Becher; and artist Rosalind Nashashibi lists her Top Ten.

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Visit artguide–Artforum’s free directory of the international art world, listing art fairs, auctions, and current gallery and museum shows in more than four hundred cities–at http://www.artforum.com/guide

For more information go to: http://www.Artforum.com

BOZAR. Agency - Specimen

Monday, October 1st, 2007

Artipedia - Arts News
Centre for Fine Arts Brussels (BOZAR)

BOZAR EXPO
Faire un effort : agence - Specimen
11.10 - 25.11.2007

Centre for Fine Arts Brussels (BOZAR)
Rue Ravensteinstraat 23 - 1000 Brussels
+ 32 (0)2 507 82 00
Monday to Sunday, 10 am - 6 pm
Thursday, 10 am - 9 pm

http://www.bozar.be

Agency presents quasi-things. Quasi-things fall just inside or outside a category, they move from one category to another or they don’t belong to any category at all… In short, things that witness hesitation in terms of classification.

On the occasion of the exhibition series "Faire un effort" of NICC at the Centre for Fine Arts Brussels, agency presents quasi-things that are related to conflicts concerning authorship. Some of these conflicts lead to a lawsuit. As opposed to visitors of an art centre, who usually approach things in a subjective way, a judge is expected to make an objective judgement. For the purpose of evaluating copyright, a judge employs the division between categories such as nature and culture, evolution and creation, object and subject, collective versus individual… Many things are difficult to classify as such.

Take for example Specimen 770. This quasi-thing is part of the German TV film “Zwischen Zirkuskuppel und Manege” that was broadcasted by WRD in 1964 (see picture). The point of conflict is the copyright of a dance of a circus elephant. The judge has to decide whether the film abused the copyright of this dance. The resulting discussion during the lawsuit questions whether the taming of an elephant can be protected by copyright of dance.

On Sunday October 14, 2007 at 2 pm agency makes a call for concerned artist, producers, lawyers and others to present such specimens. During the whole duration of the exhibition quasi-things can be brought in. In order to add things to the collection, a temporarily office will be set-up inside the exhibition space. Therefore the set-up of the exhibition will constantly change.

What will happen when quasi-things are presented inside an exhibition? This is difficult to know beforehand. This exhibition is an experiment.

Admission free

Co-production: NICC

For more information go to: http://www.bozar.be